Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Nokia N900 is a Powerful Mobile Device


The latest addition to the Nokia family is the first device running Maemo 5, a new OS that takes the best of Nokia's internet tablet range and stuffs it into a phone-sized chassis. Featuring a huge 3.5-inch screen and full slide-out QWERTY keyboard, it's also packing a seriously strong engine under the hood to power things along. The Nokia N900 offers a powerful mobile Web browser, plenty of storage, a 5-megapixel camera, and an ultrasharp display. It's also fast, multitasks well, and has excellent call quality. Wi-Fi, 3G, Bluetooth, and GPS are all onboard. Powered by a 600MHz TI OMAP3 3430 (Cortex A8) processor, the N900 performes beautifully. The large screen dominates the device, and for good reason - the keyboard is an ancillary addition, rather than key to the whole experience.



The Nokia N900 repair parts carries over some very uniquely Nokia-esque elements, notably the spring-loaded slider for toggling standby mode and the power button mounted dead center along the top edge. They're complemented by a volume rocker, 3.5mm headphone jack (doubling as a TV-out), two-stage camera button, and micro-USB port along the sides. One of the neat features that the Internet Tablet line has always had is a kickstand. The N900 keeps this tradition going, but, unlike the N800 and N810 before it, this kickstand is actually designed around the camera-slider's chrome bezel, and doesn't do as good of a job in terms of keeping the device at a stable, angled viewing level.

The camera on the N900 is pretty much standard fare for a mobile phone these days - 5 mega pixel lens with dual flash LED, and a nice little slidey lens cover to keep everything safe. It is nice to have a few photo-editing options, such as being able to rotate and crop snaps straight after taking them. There's also the opportunity of Nokia N900 repair services and to tag photos as well, where you can assign a label (or more) to the snap and then when it comes to viewing it in the photo gallery.



The Nokia N900 is the next evolution of the company's Internet Table, and don't let its smaller size fool you. It delivers more power, adds phone capabilities, and has one of most robust mobile Web browsers on the market today. It also runs on the Linux-based Maemo platform, which offers great customization options and multitasking abilities but has yet to live up to its full possibilities. The Nokia N900 features a 1320mAh lithium ion battery with a rated talk time of 9 hours (GSM)/5 hours (3G).

2 comments:

  1. No, unless you can convince the American service provider you buy it from to unlock it. They probably won't. All providers in the US and Canada electronically lock their phones so you cannot take them to any other provider.
    iPhone repair Richardson

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  2. Thank you for this information. I am trying to find a good cell phone store in North Vancouver that can fix my broken phone. Do you have any suggestions? Thanks.

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